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prada bags shopstyle way through the interview, I hinted, but he didn't ask me. I thought, 'well I'm not going to fing spell it out for you unless you have the balls to say it'. He didn't write it but you only have to read the interview to see I was telling everyone I was gay."Ironically, it was a women's magazine that 'exposed' the secret. Roberts knew about it, he was being paid for his part in the story about his boy friend Shane, but he regrets the "bitchy, gay" way it was presented. After all that time, he hadn't got to announce his sexuality on his terms.Over the next 12 months, Roberts became the talk of rugby league. He featured in a number of magazines, newspapers and television programmes while other players publicly supported his stance.Blokey TV show The Footy Show poked fun at Roberts but hosts Paul Vautin, Peter Sterling and Steve Roach also appeared in a poster campaign against homophobia.Despite this, however, Roberts is one of the few professional sportsmen to admit he's gay. To this day, sport remains one of the last bastions of homophobia but he hides any disappointment about that."If 10 per cent of the population is gay, then 10 per cent of rugby league is gay," he says. "I know that for a fact. It was strange, because people wanted me to start outing people. It's not for me to tell people how to live their lives."I'm not this gay missionary or crusader. It's small steps. If nothing else, my nieces and nephews have no problem with gay people and they are the next generation. I'm not here to change the world, rather, I have accepted my lot in life."Soon after the truth was known, Roberts became a different person and a different player. For years, he had lived in fear and with an unremitting anger that often erupted on the rugby league field. In 1991 he famously laid into Garry Jack and the Balmain fullback sued. They settled out of court in 1999."Being gay had a lot to do with the anger ," he explains. "That and because I couldn't read and write very well."Rugby league was a way for me to channel that anger into something positive. I wouldn't have been as good a player without it."By 1993 it got to a point where I was dealing with a lot of st, waiting for the